Assume inside air temperature is 80F and that the evap coil is 30F. Then the TD would be 80-30F=50F. However, if the coil is colder, eg. 20F, then the TD would be 80-20=60F. With this higher TD, heat is removed from the ambient air faster, ie. house cooling is faster.
(Note: The evap coil temp is not really measured directly! It is converted from a pressure measurement. Refrigerant has a different "boiling" point for different pressures. And you can look at a chart to find the boiling temperature that corresponds to any pressure. For that 30F in the above example, you would measure the pressure, then find the the "boiling" point for that pressure --- it would be 30F)
(Note also: Be careful not to confuse TD with dT (delta T) measurement, which is the temperature difference of the air entering the air handler and the air leaving the nearest register)
The higher the number, the colder it becomes .
A refrigerator gets colder when the number is turned higher.
Yes, it can feel colder with higher humidity because the moisture in the air can make it harder for your body to regulate its temperature, making you feel colder than the actual temperature.
At higher altitudes, the air pressure decreases, causing the air molecules to spread out and the temperature to drop. This is why it is colder at higher altitudes.
At higher elevations, the air pressure decreases, causing the air to expand and cool down. This drop in temperature is why it is colder at higher elevations.
The higher the colder it gets
Yes,because the higher you go the colder you get. The temperature drops to 11 degrees
On a refrigerator "5" is usually a colder temperature setting than "1". On heaters the opposite is true: 1 is usually the lowest temperature setting, and numbers greater than 1 are for higher temperatures.
At higher altitudes, the air pressure decreases, causing the air molecules to spread out more. This spreading out of molecules leads to a decrease in temperature, making it colder at higher altitudes.
Your about to leave Earth's regular temperature. In other words, at the surface of Earth, it's actually more warmer down there. But once you get higher, it starts to get less warmer and starts to get more colder. The higher you go, the colder it gets.
It affects with temperature. The higher you go the colder it gets. Example: Mt. Hood is high in elevation and the higher that you climb the mountain the colder it gets!
The higher the elevation, the colder it gets.